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The Daily Muck

Robert Fromm, former Defense Department official and employee of Michael Wade's infamous contracting company MZM, has pleaded guilty to one count of violating a lifetime employment ban. Fromm has expressed his willingness to talk with officials about ongoing investigations. He is scheduled for sentencing in January. (Charlottesville Daily Progress)

Earning reports for Washington lobbying firms were very strong in the first half of 2007. According to CQ.com, a half-dozen midsize firms “at least double[d] their average six-month take during the 109th Congress.” Jim Turner, a former Democratic representative from Texas (top Democrat on Homeland Security Committee) had to sit out last season because of revolving door rules, but this year he is credited with tripling; the income of Arnold & Porter. (CQ)

The Justice Department has spent $214 million gathering DNA samples from convicted criminals and updating their DNA testing labs. And yet, over the same time period, the Department hasn't spent a dime of the $8 million allocated by Congress for using DNA evidence to potentially exonerate convicts. (USA TODAY)

Federal authorities have raided the home of disgraced fundraiser Norman Hsu. They seized all the fun stuff, including his wine collection (valued over $100,000) and a saxophone signed by Bill Clinton. (AP)

Former Veco CEO Bill Allen has pleaded guilty to crimes including bribing public officials. Executives at his former firm have pleaded guilty to “crimes including making conduit contributions to politicians -- basically giving employees money to make contributions to politicians.” Nonetheless, few people who have received Veco cash have felt compelled to return it. Much of it can be found in the coffers of campaign funds of members of the Senate appropriations committee. (American Public Media)

Yesterday we reported that the Environmental Protection Agency had settled a huge case that would require $5 billion in cleanup for American Electric Power. Despite the case being opened under the Clinton administration, Bush fans were calling the case vindication for the administration's choice to focus the EPA on a handful of particularly large cases (which would explain the noticeable paucity in investigations over the past six years). But that talking point has already been put to rest, as Bush's EPA has announced that it no longer intends to prosecute or enforce similar cases. (Washington Post)

The show has reached a new low. An administration brief prepared for next week's oral arguments in front of the Supreme Court argues that Guantanamo detainees "enjoy more procedural protections than any other captured enemy combatants in the history of warfare." (NY Times)

The Army has had better success in the past few months of meeting its recruitment targets, but at a certain price. In order to meet quota, the Army has been accepting more soldiers who do not have a high school degree. And, since the start of the war in 2003, the Army has doubled the percentage of new recruits with criminal records. (Chicago Tribune)

In the "Where Are They Now?" file, former Congressional aide-cum-lobbyist-cum-aide again Jeffrey Shockey has made the quiet transition to soccer dad, at least according to his charitable giving. Shocker was a former aide to Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-CA) who later demonstrated an "insider's talent" for securing funds from Lewis' committees. Seven of Shocker's lobbyist clients have already been subpoenaed in federal investigations. (Harper's)

Rudy Giuliani claims, on his Web site, that as mayor he increased the NYC police force by 12,000 officers between 1994 and mid-2000. However, FactCheck.org finds Rudy’s math suspect: “Most of the cops he's counting – 7,100 to be exact – were already housing or transit police who were simply folded into the New York Police Department.” Taking this sleight of hand into account, the real increase was approximately 3,660. Oh, and did Giuliani mention that President Bill Clinton covered part of the cost for those new officers? (Time’ “Swampland”, FactCheck.org)


Comments (5)

Mike wrote on October 11, 2007 1:33 PM:

I'm surprised Guiliani didn't say he had added 13.17 X 911 officers....

Perhaps he could have said, "I added 911 officers on June 10th, and on June 11th, I added another 911 officers. In fact, I added 911 officers a day until I got to June 23rd when I only added 167 to make it 12,000 officers.

I wanted to keep adding 911 officers every day until the force was at 911,911 officers, but, the democrats wouldn't let me."

Al Swearengen wrote on October 11, 2007 2:02 PM:

This story about the DNA not being used to exonerate prisoners is the #1 story for me today. Nothing gets my head spinning quite like purposefull injustice.

Harpers.com had something on Siegelman that I read and posted on this morning, regarding the testimony given which implicates Rove. That's the same type of deal.

I wonder if Georgia Thompson is available for interviews?

Powkat wrote on October 11, 2007 3:52 PM:

Military recruiters complain that parents are discouraging their children from enlisting. Well, duh; aside from the obvious danger of being sent to Iraq repeatedly, who wants their kid to be at the mercy of drop-outs and criminals? In essence, the military is reduced to taking people who have no other options.

tiowally wrote on October 11, 2007 6:13 PM:

Exonerate the innocent? Don't be ridiculous.

There was an article in Salon.com a number of years back that contained a wonderful exchange between one of the judges and the state attorney that took place in some state Supreme Court (Virginia, cradle of democracy?). The case dealt with a statute of limitations issue.

The judge asked the prosecutor: "So you're telling me that even if evidence comes to light that the defendant is innocent we must still execute him because he filed too late."

"Yes," said the prosecutor.

sorge wrote on October 11, 2007 11:20 PM:

Fromm ran the FIRES database at NGIC. He was one of a GROUP of MZMers that succeeded one guy, Steve Jenkins, after senior NGIC management took Jenkins off the database he had built from scratch and turned into a multimillion dollar success story. This is a classic example of waste, fraud and abuse and one I hope gets media attention one day--but from what I have seen I would bet the public never learns the truth.

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